Abstract
Intracellular traffic and recycling of apical insulin binding sites are examined in isolated, perfused proximal tubules. The endocytic binding sites were specific as revealed by 90% reduction in 125I-labeled insulin binding by 10(-5) M insulin. The traffic was followed by developing a chemical cross-linking method to covalently label the binding sites. Only 3% of cross-linked insulin-gold was transported to the lysosomes, reflecting high sorting and recycling efficiency. Correspondingly, only 4% of cross-linked 125I-insulin was degraded, and only 5% of the electron microscopy-autoradiographic grains was associated with lysosomes. No label was transferred to the Golgi apparatus; thus neither lysosomes nor Golgi apparatus is involved in the recycling. In contrast, approximately 40% of non-cross-linked ligand was transferred to the lysosomes. Tubules first pretreated with cross-linker and then perfused with insulin-gold or 125I-labeled insulin-like growth factor I revealed lysosomal accumulation and degradation at control levels. Thus the cross-linker does not interfere with membrane or protein processing. The study also provides evidence for a vesicular transtubular transport because insulin-gold was transcytosed to the basolateral part of the cells and to the intracellular spaces (0.5%). In contrast cross-linked label was never observed in intercellular spaces, suggesting sorting of apical binding sites, a mechanism contributing to maintenance of cell polarity. In conclusion, traffic, sorting, and recycling of binding sites take place with high efficiency.
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